This module provides a simple way to time small bits of Python code.
It has both command line as well as callable interfaces. It avoids a
number of common traps for measuring execution times. See also Tim
Peters' introduction to the ``Algorithms'' chapter in the
Python Cookbook, published by O'Reilly.

The module defines the following public class:

classTimer(

[stmt='pass'[, setup='pass'[, timer=<timer function>]]])

Class for timing execution speed of small code snippets.

The constructor takes a statement to be timed, an additional statement
used for setup, and a timer function. Both statements default to
'pass'; the timer function is platform-dependent (see the
module doc string). The statements may contain newlines, as long as
they don't contain multi-line string literals.

To measure the execution time of the first statement, use the
timeit() method. The repeat() method is a
convenience to call timeit() multiple times and return a list
of results.

The advantage over the standard traceback is that source lines in the
compiled template will be displayed.
The optional file argument directs where the traceback is sent;
it defaults to sys.stderr.

repeat(

[repeat=3[,
number=1000000]])

Call timeit() a few times.

This is a convenience function that calls the timeit()
repeatedly, returning a list of results. The first argument specifies
how many times to call timeit(). The second argument
specifies the number argument for timeit().

Note:
It's tempting to calculate mean and standard deviation from the result
vector and report these. However, this is not very useful. In a typical
case, the lowest value gives a lower bound for how fast your machine can run
the given code snippet; higher values in the result vector are typically not
caused by variability in Python's speed, but by other processes interfering
with your timing accuracy. So the min() of the result is
probably the only number you should be interested in. After that, you
should look at the entire vector and apply common sense rather than
statistics.

timeit(

[number=1000000])

Time number executions of the main statement.
This executes the setup statement once, and then
returns the time it takes to execute the main statement a number of
times, measured in seconds as a float. The argument is the number of
times through the loop, defaulting to one million. The main
statement, the setup statement and the timer function to be used are
passed to the constructor.